The Wise Man's Fear
by Patrick Rothfuss
book 2 of The Kingkiller Chronicles
fantasy
first published 2011
read in February 2013
rated 7 out of 10: well worth reading
There is just one problem with this book: it is tedious.
Look, we started book one with the hero going to magic school. There was a lot of detail but fine, it's a new world, let's get some detail about this new world. But really!
Half way through book two and we are still getting details of life at school... Sure, we know that the hero carries a grudge. His aim in life is to find and kill seven evil dudes. But come on! How many times do we need to be told that no-one knows anything about these evil dudes?!
Okay, there is a second problem. The hero is borderline ratbag. Remember that other book series about a boy at magic school? Remember the one book where Harry Potter was a teenage creep? That was an uncomfortable story -- hard to like the hero -- but it fitted in with a boy growing up -- and it was just one book of seven.
Kvothe, the hero of Fear, is short-tempered. He rejects his teachers teachings. He initiates cruel tricks on his enemy. Okay, that's his style. Doesn't make it any easier to like him though.
So he continues with school for the first half of this book. Then grudgingly accepts the advice of his friends and goes overseas for experience, adventure and letting the heat die down. Has one slow adventure. Goes to another school. Has another relatively quick adventure.
You can see that all of this is building up, to give him the skills to defeat his seven major enemies. Can't it go just a littler faster?!
War, they say, is weeks of boredom interspersed with minutes of mortal fear. The joy of a novel is that the author can say that... then skip past the weeks of boredom. Rothfuss skips very little...
Not that he gives us boredom... But he gives us enough detail of the slow build-up that we -- or at least I -- find it tedious.
I also have a small fear...
Is this book two of a trilogy?
Or will The Kingkiller Chronicles continue on... forever...?
If book three brings a conclusion -- then great, it's a fascinating series, worth the effort of reading. If book three ends -- and the hero had yet to battle his enemies... then I believe that I shall give up.
All very well to build a unique and interesting world. I just hope that there is a point to it... And by that I mean, I hope that there is a story to be told... A story with a beginning, a middle -- and an end.
I have no objection to a story which leaves openings for subsequent stories. But first, I want the current story to reach a satisfactory conclusion.
This book is well worth reading. The series is still waiting to be rated.
====
Problems ? Solved
No comments:
Post a Comment